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Outreach
Civic engagement, college, marrying at IUK through American Democracy Project
By Mary Ellen Stephenson

Green

IU Kokomo is participating in the national American Democracy Project (ADP), aimed at building students’ understanding of and commitment to meaningful civic involvement. Through academic and student life programs, undergraduates will be encouraged to engage in voting, advocacy, local volunteerism and “other civic activities necessary for the vitality of a democracy,” said Stuart Green, Kokomo vice chancellor for academic affairs. Deans, chairs, directors, faculty and student affairs personnel will help develop curriculum enhancements that complement the ADP goals.

The ADP also will attempt to inform policymakers and opinion leaders on the civic value of the college experience. The national project is a cooperative venture of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) and the New York Times. The project initially will involve 130 AASCU-member campuses, including administrators, some 2,600 faculty and staff, and more than 100,000 students.

Green sought ideas for IU Kokomo’s ADP programming at an AASCU’s conference for chief academic officers July 31–Aug. 3 in Snowbird, Utah.

“The project was born out of research and literature bemoaning the growing apathy and lack of civic engagement at all levels in American society,” said Green. “The ADP was given impetus by Sept. 11, 2001, and popular books such as Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone.

The campus’ Retention Action Plan calls for creation of an academic/student life committee that will develop and implement stronger ties between academic programs and student activities, Green said. Joining other campuses around the country in the ADP provides a means “to accomplish the twin goals of enhancing civic engagement and increasing the relationship between the curriculum and student life,” he said.